How to Confront No Ordinary Danger

Issue Date January 2025
Volume 36
Issue 1
Page Numbers 151–161
file Print
arrow-down-thin Download from Project MUSE
external View Citation

Read the full essay here.

This essay examines the debate over whether states can legitimately use emergency powers to address climate change. The author challenges Lazar and Wallace’s arguments against climate authoritarianism, arguing that climate change constitutes a genuine emergency requiring urgent action. While rejecting both purely authoritarian approaches and the status quo of Western liberal democracy, the essay proposes a third way: empowering citizens through targeted activism and climate assemblies. This solution may paradoxically require both more democratic and more authoritarian elements. The author contends that current evidence does not support claims of democratic superiority in climate action, and suggests that radical but principled reform is necessary.

About the Author

Ross Mittiga is senior lecturer at SOAS University of London and author of Climate Change as Political Catastrophe: Before Collapse (2024).

View all work by Ross Mittiga

Image Credit: Ehimetalor Akhere Unuabona via Unsplash